Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I judge parents all the time. We have two nannies to make sure that childcare is always covered. If you aren't ready to juggle work and kids hen don't have them! The other folks in the office shouldn't have to pick up your slack. This goes for men and women.
Having two nannies isn't juggling work and kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I judge parents all the time. We have two nannies to make sure that childcare is always covered. If you aren't ready to juggle work and kids hen don't have them! The other folks in the office shouldn't have to pick up your slack. This goes for men and women.
If you aren't ready to actually spend time with your children then don't have them.
+ 1
Bravo! Good reply to this obnoxious woman!
Anonymous wrote:I judge parents all the time. We have two nannies to make sure that childcare is always covered. If you aren't ready to juggle work and kids hen don't have them! The other folks in the office shouldn't have to pick up your slack. This goes for men and women.
Anonymous wrote:As someone whose spouse suffered from terrible PPD after our second and had to handle a toddler on top of doing daycare drop offs, I just sigh. We give each other so much grief in the work place just so we can defend our little piece of the piece.
I was that worker trying to juggle working at 5 am before the kids were awake or sending emails at 11 after that last feeding while straining to help my ill spouse. I didn't advertise it, but we are too hard on each other. Life happens. Illnesses happens. And while I get it, America's a competition and dog eat dog, you just never know when you are going to be that person in need.
We are all better now. I actually have risen to the senior executive levels in my company, and I am probably the most fair, kind leader when it comes to family/work balance because I've been there. Any of could will and inevitably will be because we are all mortals. We're one exam or tumor or stroke away from being the "needy" employee. Marissa Mayer included.
Anonymous wrote:curious: do you guys think that working from home is the solution to all this? Working from home can be a challenge because it may make it harder to be promoted (not as visible) and people may feel like they have to be always "on" in order to prove themselves. I wonder why the solution offered in this op-ed wasn't better management or training to prevent people like her former self from making those horrible management decisions, part time options, ect. I wasn't satisfied with her analysis that her company's model of women working from home would be a way to remedy this situation. I mean maybe some companies can do this but not all can.
Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I know the author.
While I'm sure there's a grain of truth here, I wondered why Fortune was basically running an advertorial.
Anonymous wrote:This woman is a terrible person. No manager should treat any employee this way - man/woman/with/without kids.
Anonymous wrote:curious: do you guys think that working from home is the solution to all this? Working from home can be a challenge because it may make it harder to be promoted (not as visible) and people may feel like they have to be always "on" in order to prove themselves. I wonder why the solution offered in this op-ed wasn't better management or training to prevent people like her former self from making those horrible management decisions, part time options, ect. I wasn't satisfied with her analysis that her company's model of women working from home would be a way to remedy this situation. I mean maybe some companies can do this but not all can.
Anonymous wrote:curious: do you guys think that working from home is the solution to all this? Working from home can be a challenge because it may make it harder to be promoted (not as visible) and people may feel like they have to be always "on" in order to prove themselves. I wonder why the solution offered in this op-ed wasn't better management or training to prevent people like her former self from making those horrible management decisions, part time options, ect. I wasn't satisfied with her analysis that her company's model of women working from home would be a way to remedy this situation. I mean maybe some companies can do this but not all can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great. So much better than Marissa Mayer, who after become a mother insists that nothing has changed.
No sh*t. If someone had rigged up a nursery next to my office and installed a nanny, my worklife wouldn't have changed much either.
I hate Marissa Meyer more as a WOHM than I did as a SAHM.